Osip Mandelstam

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Osip Mandelstam Page 30

by Selected Essays (epub)


  1. From On Guard (Na Postu), the journal of RAPP (Russian Association of Proletarian Writers). A militantly proletarian tendency in pre-1934 Soviet literary life.

  2. Reference is probably to Pushkin’s Mazepa (Poltava) rather than Byron’s. I use Byron’s spelling, assuming it more familiar to the English reader.

  3. Khlysty: a religious sect. The meaning is literally “flagellants,” but they were not known for their dour ascetic self-scourging as much as for their ritualized joyous responses to the divine; they were “ecstatics.”

  4. Another religious sect. Literally means “milk-drinker.”

  5. “Official” language. The charge was often leveled against Mandelstam.

  6. Nikolai Iakovlevich Marr (1864–1934). Gifted linguist; Marxist. Persuaded Stalin of the truth or at least the usefulness of his theory of the class origins of language. For a time, he occupied a place in linguistics almost equivalent to that of Lysenko in genetics. After his death, he and his work were denounced by Stalin himself, in Stalin’s last major theoretical pronouncement, in 1952, his essay on linguistics.

  7. That part of Moscow beyond the Moscow River from the main city, associated with the playwright Ostrovsky and with Apollon Grigoriev, a place inhabited by merchants and artisans, and redolent of the spirit of old, traditional Russia.

  8. Paul Signac, D’Eugène Delacroix au néo-impressionisme (Paris, 1911).

  9. The Russian word obyvateli, which means literally “the inhabitants, those who live there,” also carries the connotation of “philistines.”

  10. Boris Godunov, regent during the reign of Tsar Fedor I (1584–1598), Fedor’s brother-in-law, and one of the last close companions of Fedor’s father, Ivan the Terrible. Later himself elected Tsar (1598–1605) by the Zemsky Sobor. His reign inaugurated the Time of Troubles. Godunov was the descendant of a minor boyar family that was Tatar in origin, and it was sometimes said that the Tatar shone through.

  11. To my query, Clarence Brown responded: “The termenvox is the well-known musical instrument named after its inventor, the immortal Lev Termen (b. 1896),” to which he added, “of course.”

  12. Alexander Ilyich Bezymensky (b. 1898). Poet, member of the Party since 1916. During the period 1923–1936, he had been an active member of RAPP (Russian Association of Proletarian Writers) and one of the basic contributors to its journal On Guard (Na Postu).

  13. The Russian says literally “shoe tree.” It did not strike me as correct to stretch a glove on a shoe tree. However, the play of words in Russian justifies the usage: na kolodku, “on a shoe tree”; okolodok, “neighborhood.”

  14. In Russian, fruits ripen and eyes become bloodshot by means of the same verb: nalivaiushchikhsia plodov, “ripening fruits”; glaza nalivaiutsia krov’iu, “eyes become bloodshot.”

  15. Lipovyi means “deceptive,” but also suggests lipa, a linden or lime tree; i.e., “linden-lined.”

  16. Nedotroga may mean either the flower or an especially touchy person.

  17. One of the oldest settlements in Armenia, at one time an important cultural center. It is about twenty miles from Erevan and contains a number of ancient ruins, some going back as far as the fifth century.

  18. A suburb of Erevan, on the way to Ashtarak.

  19. King of the Arshakide dynasty, which ruled Armenia from 63 to 428 A.D. In the fourth century the kingdom was divided into Roman and Iranian spheres of influence.

  20. Shapur, or Sapores (Greek), or Pahlavi Shahpur II (310–379), defeated the Romans in 363 (death of Julian), and overran Armenia; made some attempt to impose Zoroastrianism on Christian Armenia. Shapur imprisoned the Parthian King Arshak (Arsaces III) in a fortress, where the latter committed suicide. In spite of the political unrest that characterized it, the fifth century that followed these events was the Golden Age of Armenian culture.

  21. Mandelstam works in the “stolen air” theme, central to “Fourth Prose.”

  Index of Names

  Abraham, 42, 201

  Adalis (Adelina Efron), 134, 230

  Adam, 27, 42, 73, 77, 199; and Eve, 200

  Aeschylus, 149

  Aikhenvald, Iuly, 89, 225

  Akhmatova, Anna, xiii, 54, 77, 81, 148, 150, 220, 230

  Aksenov, I. A., 133

  Alighieri, Dante, xiii, xiv, xv, xvi, xviii, 3–34, 93, 107, 188, 197, 212, 213, 214, 237

  Andreev, Leonid, 139, 231

  Annensky, Innokenty, 73, 74, 75, 146, 147, 148, 222

  Apukhtin, Aleksei, 148, 232

  Archilochus, 97

  Aristophanes, xx

  Aristotle, 7, 26

  Arrowsmith, William, 211

  Arshak, 206, 207, 239

  Aseev, Nikolai, 54, 135, 136, 152, 219

  Averbakh, Leopold, 234

  Averroës, Ibn Rushd, 7, 213

  Bach, Johann Sebastian, 12, 23, 129, 131, 183, 223

  Bachelard, Gaston, xvi, 210

  Balmont, Konstantin, xiii, xxii, 60, 61, 63, 73, 92, 145, 146, 221

  Balzac, Honoré de, 86, 138

  Baratynsky, Evgeny. See Boratynski, Evgeny

  Batiushkov, Konstantin, 44, 81, 153, 218

  Baudelaire, Charles, 21, 51, 94, 145, 226

  Beatrice (B. Portinari), 16, 21, 29, 39

  Beethoven, Ludwig van, xviii, 125, 126, 223

  Berberova, Nina, 220, 231

  Bergson, Henri, 66

  Bezymensky, Alexander I., 192, 239

  Biely, Andrei (Boris N. Bugaev), xiii, xix, xxiv, 69, 92, 134, 138, 139, 140, 141, 145, 147, 212–213, 222, 225

  Bizet, Georges, 91

  Blagoi, Dmitry D., 163, 236

  Blok, Alexander, xix, 16, 89–93, 136, 146, 150, 151, 215, 225, 226

  Boccaccio, Giovanni, 12

  Böhme, Jakob, xvii

  Bonaparte, Napoleon, 86, 198, 218

  Boratynsky, Evgeny (also spelled Baratynsky), 59, 60, 61, 149, 220

  Bosio, Angelina, 165, 236, 237

  Brahms, Johannes, 31

  Briusov, Valery, 78, 92, 145, 147, 148, 220

  Brodsky, Joseph, xx

  Brown, Clarence, xxi, 209, 210, 213, 229, 230, 236, 237, 239

  Bruno, Giordano, 37

  Buckle, Henry Thomas, 78, 223

  Buffon, Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de, 196

  Bugaev, Boris N. See Biely, Andrei

  Bukharin, Nikolai I., xxiii, 164, 234, 236

  Bulgakov, Mikhail, 235

  Bürger, Gottfried August, 32

  Byron, George Gordon, Lord, 110, 238

  Caesar, Gaius Julius, 7

  Catullus, Gaius Valerius, xxii, 50, 51, 219

  Cavalcanti, Guido, 10

  Cézanne, Paul, 193

  Chaadaev, Peter, xii, xvii, 70, 71, 101–107, 222, 227

  Chateaubriand, François-René, Vicomte de, 110

  Chénier, André, xxii, 78, 108–113, 166, 227, 228, 237

  Chénier, Marie-Joseph, 166, 237

  Chopin, Frédéric F., 7, 190

  Christ, Jesus, xvii, xviii, 124, 125

  Cimabue, Giovanni, 18, 215

  Cohen, Arthur, xxiii, 209, 211, 212

  Columbus, Christopher, 25, 199

  Confucius, xiv

  Coppée, François, 152, 233

  Cyril, 80, 224

  Dal, Vladimir, 73

  Dante. See Alighieri, Dante

  D’Anthès, Georges, 163, 236

  Darwin, Charles, 196

  David, Jacques Louis, xxi, 50, 218

  Delacroix, Eugène, 181, 239

  Democritus, 7

  Demosthenes, 24

  Derzhavin, Gavrila, 55, 65, 67, 94, 149, 219, 221

  Dickens, Charles, 197

  Dionysus, 125, 126, 220, 229

  Dolidze, Fedor I., 133, 230

  Doré, Gustave, 215

  Dostoevsky, Fedor, 10, 138, 226

  Dürer, Albrecht, 35

  Dymshits, Alexander, xiii, 209, 210

  Efron, Adelina. See Adalis

  Eikhenbaum, Boris M., 89, 134, 225, 230

  Einstein,
Albert, 134, 151

  Eliot, T. S., xiv, xv, xviii, 210

  Erlich, Victor, 230

  Esenin, Sergei, 152, 163, 233, 236

  Euclid, 67

  Euripides, 74, 123

  Eve, 200

  Fadeev, Alexander, 234

  Farinata degli Uberti, 9, 10, 24, 25

  Fedin, Konstantin, 141, 232

  Fet, Afanasy A., 83, 92, 224

  Filipoff, Boris, 209, 210, 218, 221, 228, 229, 230, 235, 237

  Firdousi, 200

  Flaubert, Gustave, 85, 98, 211

  Foucault, Léon, 36

  France, Anatole, 157

  Frye, Northrop, 213

  Gershenzon, Mikhail, 71

  Ginzburg, Lidia, 209

  Giotto di Bondone, 18

  Gippius, V. V., xi

  Gluck, Christoph Willibald von, 82, 196, 224

  Godunov, Boris, 67, 106, 186, 239

  Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 87, 99, 187

  Gogol, Nikolai, 142, 237

  Goldoni, Carlo, 148

  Golenishchev-Kutuzov, Arseny, 148, 232

  Goncourt, Edmond and Jules de, 85, 98, 211

  Gorky, Maxim (Aleksei M. Peshkov), 139, 231

  Gornfeld, Arkady G., 161, 163, 164, 167, 233, 235

  Gorodetsky, Sergei M., 77, 222, 229

  Griboedov, Alexander S., 235

  Grigoriev, Apollon A., xxiv, 90, 225

  Grimm, Jacob, 30

  Grin, Alexander (Grinevsky, Alexander S.), 161, 235

  Gumilev, Nikolai S., xii, 54, 65, 74, 77, 220, 229

  Handel, George Frederick, 224

  Harte, Bret, 139

  Haydn, Franz Joseph, 196

  Heidegger, Martin, xvii

  Heine, Heinrich, 91

  Hemingway, Ernest, xii

  Heredia, José Maria de, 21

  Herzen, Alexander I., 84, 165, 211, 224, 225, 227

  Hesiod, 90

  Hoffmann, Ernst Theodor Wilhelm, 78, 223, 232

  Hokusai, 98

  Homer, 41, 51, 73

  Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus), 42

  Hughes, Robert, 213

  Hugo, Victor, 12, 203

  Iazykov, Nikolai M., 80, 81, 102, 223

  Ibsen, Henrik, 176

  Ivanov, Viacheslav I., 54, 55, 74, 78, 145, 147, 211, 219, 229

  Ivanov, Vsevolod, 142, 232

  Ivanov-Razumnik, Razumnik Vasilevich, 89, 225

  Ivask, Iurii (George), 210, 229

  Joshua, xviii, 52

  Kagan, Benjamin Fedorovich, 157, 235

  Kant, Immanuel, 130

  Kariakin, V. N., 167, 233

  Kataev, Valentin, 234

  Khlebnikov, Velemir, 54, 68, 70, 81, 82, 83, 133, 141, 145, 147, 151, 152, 213, 219

  Khodasevich, Vladislav, 54, 135, 148, 149, 220, 232

  Kipling, Rudyard, 190

  Kliuchevsky, Vasily O., xiii, xvii, 90, 226

  Kliuev, Nikolai, 152, 233

  Korolenko, Vladimir G., 164, 236

  Kostomarov, Nikolai I., 90, 226

  Kozyrev, Mikhail, 141, 142, 232

  Kruchenykh, Aleksei, xiii, 135, 231

  Krylov, I. A., 169, 198, 220, 237

  Kuzin, B. S., xxiv, 183, 185, 189, 232

  Kuzmin, Mikhail A., 54, 81, 148, 149, 219, 221, 232

  La Fontaine, Jean de, 198

  Lamarck, J.-B. Pierre-Antoine de Monet, Chevalier de, xxiv, xxv, 196, 197, 198

  Lamartine, Alphonse de, 110

  Latini, Brunetto, 7

  Leconte de Lisle, Charles Marie, 21, 74

  Lenin (Vladimir I. Ulyanov), 169, 231, 236

  Leonardo da Vinci, 18

  Leontiev, Konstantin, 71

  Leskov, Nikolai, 142, 232

  Lidin, Vadim G., 141, 232

  Linnaeus, Carolus, 196, 199

  Liszt, Franz von, 223

  Lobachevsky, Nikolai I., 67

  Lomonosov, Mikhail V., 24, 81, 95, 216

  Lucan (M. Annaeus Lucanus), 42

  Luther, Martin, xix, 72, 82

  Mallarmé, Stéphane, 74, 145

  Mandelstam, Isaiah B., 157, 158, 235

  Mandelstam, Nadezhda Iakovlevna, xxiii, xxv, 209, 210, 212, 223, 228, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237

  Manet, Edouard, 189

  Markov, Vladimir, 221

  Marot, Clément, 110, 227, 228

  Marr, Nikolai I., 174, 179, 202, 238

  Marx, Karl, 191

  Matisse, Henri, 193

  Mayakovsky, Vladimir, xiii, 54, 133, 135, 152, 219, 230

  Mérimée, Prosper, 91, 139

  Methodius, 80, 224

  Mommsen, Theodor, 74, 219

  Monet, Claude, 189, 194

  Montesquieu, Charles de Secondat, Baron de, 112

  Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 79, 188, 196, 223

  Mravian, Askanaz A., 162, 236

  Musset, Alfred de, 112, 149

  Nadson, Semen, 63, 148, 221

  Napoleon, 86, 198, 218

  Narbut, Vladimir, 77, 223

  Nekrasov, Nikolai, 65, 71, 90, 92, 147, 221, 226, 236, 237

  Nerval, Gérard de, 229

  Newton, Sir Isaac, 157

  Nikitin, Nikolai N., 141, 142, 232

  Novalis (Georg Friedrich Philipp von Hardenberg), xv, 41, 78, 91, 218

  Odoevsky, Vladimir F., 78

  Odysseus, 23, 24, 25

  Ogarev, Nikolai P., 84, 225

  Orpheus, 124

  Ostrovsky, Alexander N., xxiv, 239

  Ovid (Publius Ovidius Naso), xxi, xxii, 42, 50, 51, 74, 218, 219, 227

  Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky, Dmitry, 55, 220

  Pallas, 196

  Paracelsus (Philipp Theofrast von Hohenheim), 25

  Parnok, Sophie I., 134, 230

  Pasternak, Boris, xviii, 54, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 136, 148, 153, 210, 220, 229, 234

  Perovsky, Sophie, 90, 226

  Peshkov, Aleksei M. See Gorky, Maxim

  Peter I, 106, 177

  Phaedra, 123, 126

  Picasso, Pablo, 194

  Pilniak (Boris A. Vogau), 139, 140, 141, 142, 231

  Pissarro, Camille, 194

  Poe, Edgar Allan, 73, 145

  Polotsky, Simeon, 65, 221

  Potebnia, Alexander A., 134, 230

  Pound, Ezra, xii, xiv, 229

  Prishvin, Mikhail M., 141, 142, 232

  Prometheus, 100, 126

  Propper, Stanislav M., 164, 236

  Psyche, xx, xxii, 49, 52

  Ptolemy, 37

  Punin, Nikolai, 220

  Pushkin, Alexander, xxiii, 50, 51, 55, 56, 58, 62, 65, 78, 81, 92, 102, 110, 111, 123–127, 139, 149, 151, 153, 190, 209, 210, 211, 214, 215, 218, 220, 223, 228, 229, 233, 236, 238

  Rabelais, François, 78, 110, 139

  Racine, Jean, xxii, 76, 78, 110, 229

  Radlova, Anna, 134, 230

  Renoir, Pierre Auguste, 194

  Rimbaud, Arthur, 21, 39

  Ripellino, A., 210

  Robespierre, Maximilien F. I. de, 50

  Rolland, Romain, 87, 99

  Rostopchina, Evdokia P., 149, 232

  Rozanov, Vasily, xx, 70, 71, 72, 73, 222

  Salieri, Antonio, 79, 223

  Schelling, Friedrich, xvii, 78

  Schubert, Franz, 223

  Schwitters, Kurt, 213

  Scriabin, Alexander, xvi, 123–127, 210, 211, 228, 229

  Serapion Brothers, 139, 140, 141, 142, 231, 232

  Sergeev-Tsensky (Sergei Nikolaevich Sergeev), 139, 231

  Shakespeare, William, 30, 78, 230

  Shapukh (Shapur or Sapores or Pahlavi Shahpur II), 207, 239

  Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 73, 145

  Shklovsky, Victor, 134, 222, 230

  Shmelev, Ivan S., 139, 231

  Signac, Paul, 181, 239

  Singleton, Charles S., 215

  Smirnov, E. S., 188

  Sologub, Fedor (Fedor K. Teternikov), 54, 61, 63, 146, 147, 148, 220

  Soloviev, Sergei M., 90, 226

  Soloviev, Vladimir S., 92, 129, 226

  Solzhenitsyn, Alexander
, 238

  Sorgenfrei, Wilhelm A., 89, 225

  Spengler, Oswald, 16, 26

  Spohr, Ludwig, 30

  Stalin (Joseph V. Djugashvil), 231, 232, 235, 236, 238

  Steiner, Rudolf, 222

  Stendhal (Marie-Henri Beyle), 86

  Stevens, Wallace, xiv

  Struve, Gleb, 209, 210, 218, 221, 228, 229, 230, 235, 237

  Sumarokov, Alexander, 148

  Swinburne, Algernon Charles, 145

  Tager, Elena, 211

  Taranovsky, Kirill, 211, 229

  Terras, Victor, xxi, 211

  Teternikov, Fedor K. See Sologub, Fedor

  Tiutchev, Fedor I., 26, 70, 129, 149, 222

  Tolstoy, Leo, 30, 67, 105

  Trediakovsky, Vasily, 81

  Trotsky, Leon, 169

  Tsvetaeva, Marina, xiii, 25, 134, 217, 230

  Tzara, Tristan, 213

  Van Gogh, Vincent, 193

  Venetsianov, Aleksei G., 158

  Vergil (Publius Vergilius Maro), 11, 17, 18, 21, 38, 41, 42

  Verhaeren, Emile, 52

  Verlaine, Paul, xv, xviii, 21, 53, 110, 114, 118, 219, 228

  Veselovsky, A. N., 230

  Viazemsky, Peter A., 149, 223

  Vigna, Pier della, 188

  Villon, François (François de Montcorbier de Loges), xiii, xviii, xxi, xxii, 59, 62, 110, 114–120, 227, 228

  Villon, Guillaume de, 115

  Vogau, Boris A. See Pilniak

  Wagner, Richard, 16

  Whitman, Walt, 73

  Zamiatin, Evgeny, 139, 142, 231

  Zenkevich, Mikhail A., 77, 223

  Zhirmunsky, Victor M., 89, 134, 225, 230

  Zola, Emile, 86

  Zoshchenko, Mikhail, 162, 169, 234, 237

 

 

 


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